Neil Gaudry (September 19, 1937 – February 18, 1999) was a politician in Manitoba, Canada. He was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba from 1988 until his death, sitting as a Liberal.

The son of Véronique Chartrand and Ernest Gaudry, he was born in St. Laurent, Manitoba and was educated there. In 1962, he married Leona Rainville. but he was still re-elected by a nearly 2-to-1 margin over the NDP, despite the Liberals winning only two other seats in the rest of the province.

The Manitoba Liberal Party experienced internal divisions in 1997, due to disgruntlement with the leadership of Ginny Hasselfield. At one stage, Kevin Lamoureux and Gary Kowalski broke from the official party caucus to sit as Independent Liberals; Gaudry was the only Liberal MLA to continue supporting the official party leadership during this period.

Neil Gaudry died of a heart attack on February 18, 1999, and the legislature passed a motion of condolence in his memory on April 26 of the same year.

Gaudry frequently championed francophone causes during his time in the legislature. He sought to have Louis Riel recognized as a Father of Confederation, and was an active member in l'Assemblee internationale des parlementaires de la langue francaise. Despite partisan differences, he also assisted the Progressive Conservative government of Gary Filmon on matters relating to francophone education.

|Progressive Conservative

|Kim F. Sigurdson

| style="text-align:right;" |1,686

| style="text-align:right;" |19.07

| style="text-align:right;" |-2.53

| style="text-align:right;" |

|Independent

|Yvan Lecuyer

| style="text-align:right;" |306

| style="text-align:right;" |3.46

| style="text-align:right;" |n/a

| style="text-align:right;" |

References